Wednesday, January 1, 2020

Animal Farm, By George Orwell - 1240 Words

1 Somehow I have become a shadow in this afterlife, remaining alongside the other animals, although they are unable to see me. But, there is something that is holding me to remain with the other animals, here at the farm. I want to see what they do, I want to see if they will be able to follow my vision of a farm not run by humans. 2 They have done it! They finally did it and now their lives are now their own, not of the humans. I am proud that they have been able to take my vision and make it their own paradise, Animal Farm. They also made a list of commandments based on what I told them that night. Of course, they will face hardships, but with the help of the commandments they made for themselves, they will have a very happy future†¦show more content†¦I am worried that one of them will fall into the hands of greed. This, though, is not something that I will think will become a problem anytime soon. The animals are doing well, and I cannot wait to see what they accomplish next. 5 No...Today, when Snowball was revealing his plans for a windmill, a windmill that would make the lives of every animal on the farm easier, Napoleon revealed his secret force of brainwashed dogs to chase him away. It turns out these were the same puppies that Napoleon took to be privately trained by himself. He turned innocent pups into his own brutal enforcers. This is the most traitorous act I have seen an animal perform since the revolution, and it completely goes against the ideals of my idea of what they are now calling â€Å"Animalism†. After everyone got over the shock of what just happened, Napoleon canceled Sunday meetings and stated he was in charge. By the glint in Napoleon’s eye, I can tell that he has ideas for this farm, horrible ideas that I could never imagine. He has ideas that will make the lives of all the animals here much harder. Today, I weep for the animals at Animal Farm. 6 Snowball joined me today. Together, we watched the animals begin to build the windmill under Napoleon’s instruction. They were still happy that they were an animal-run farm, and they were proud that they could accomplish so much by themselves. We were

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